Prompt high-energy emission from gamma-ray bursts in the internal shock model
Z. Bosnjak (1), F. Daigne (1, 2), G. Dubus (3, 1) ((1) Institut, d'Astrophysique de Paris, (2) Institut Universitaire de France, (3), Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Grenoble)

TL;DR
This paper models high-energy gamma-ray emission from gamma-ray bursts within the internal shock framework, using detailed dynamical and radiative simulations to predict observable features and constrain outflow properties.
Contribution
It introduces a combined dynamical and radiative modeling approach to accurately predict high-energy emission from GRBs, improving upon previous analytical estimates.
Findings
HE emission deviates from analytical predictions when full physics is included.
Synchrotron emission likely dominates in the BATSE range under typical conditions.
HE lightcurves can be prolonged or delayed due to inverse Compton processes.
Abstract
The prompt GRB emission is thought to arise from electrons accelerated in internal shocks propagating within a highly relativistic outflow. The launch of Fermi offers the prospect of observations with unprecedented sensitivity in high-energy (>100 MeV) gamma-rays. The aim is to explore the predictions for HE emission from internal shocks, taking into account both dynamical and radiative aspects, and to deduce how HE observations constrain the properties of the relativistic outflow. The emission is modeled by combining a time-dependent radiative code with a dynamical code giving the evolution of the physical conditions in the shocked regions.Synthetic lightcurves and spectra are compared to observations. The HE emission deviates significantly from analytical estimates, which tend to overpredict the IC component, when the time dependence and full cross-sections are included. The…
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